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Dubnium |
- Atomic Number: 105
Atomic Symbol: Db
Atomic Weight: (262)
History:
In 1967 G.N.
Flerov reported that a Soviet team working at the
Joint Institute for Nuclear Research at Dubna may
have produced a few atoms of 260-105 and 261-105
by bombarding 243Am with 22Ne. Their evidence was
based on time-coincidence measurements of alpha
energies. More recently, it was reported that
early in 1970 Dubna scientists synthesized
Element 105 and that by the end of April 1970
"had investigated all the types of decay of
the new element and had determined its chemical
properties." The Soviet group had not
proposed a name for 105. In late April 1970, it
was announced that Ghiorso, Nurmia, Haris, K.A.Y.
Eskola, and P.L. Eskola, working at the
University of California at Berkeley, had
positively identified Element 105. The discovery
was made by bombarding a target of 249Cf with a
beam of 84 MeV nitrogen nuclei in the Heavy Ion
Linear Accelerator (HILAC). When a 15N nuclear is
absorbed by a 249Cf nucleus, four neutrongs are
emitted and a new atom of 260-105 with a
half-life of 1.6 s is formed. While the first
atoms of Element 105 are said to have been
detected conclusively on March 5, 1970, there is
evidence that Element 105 had been formed in
Berkeley experiments a year earlier by the method
described. Ghiorso and his associates have
attempted to confirm Soviet findings by more
sophisticated methods without success. The
Berkeley Group proposed the name hahnium, after
the late German scientist Otto Hahn (1879-1968),
and Ha for the chemical symbol. n October 1971,
it was announced that two new isotopes of Element
105 were synthesized with the heavy ion linear
accelerator by A. Ghiorso and co-workers a
Berkeley. Element 261-105 was produced both by
bombarding 250Cf with 15N and by bombarding 249Bk
with 16O. The isotope emits 8.93-MeV alpha
particles and decays to 257Lr with a half-life of
about 1.8 s. Element 262-105 was produced by
bombarding 249Bk with 18O. It emits 8.45 MeV
alpha particles and decays to 258Lr with a
half-life of about 40 s. Seven isotopes of
Element 105 (unnilpentium) are now recognized.